Berita Terbaru

A 2018 rural health-care workforce report issued by the University of Nebraska Medical Center reveals that there has been an 11 percent increase in the number of physicians in the state over the last 10 years.

However, the report noted, there are still 13 counties that still do not have a primary care physician.

This and other key findings of the study appear in the 64-page report, "The Status of the Healthcare Workforce in the State of Nebraska."

"The health care workforce is an essential component in making Nebraska the healthiest state in the union and timely and accurate data such as this report will help inform initiatives and policies to help address those challenges," said

Jeffrey P. Gold, UNMC chancellor.

The study was commissioned and funded by the Nebraska Area Health Education Center Program (AHEC) and used the most recent data from the UNMC Health Professions Tracking Service and the state of Nebraska.

"This report helps to measure the progress we have made in the state in dealing with some of the workforce issues in rural Nebraska and in planning for the future," said Mike Sitorius, professor and chair of family medicine in the UNMC College of Medicine.

"Some programs have helped increase the number of rural health professionals, but there still exist substantial recruiting challenges to bolstering the health workforce and access to health care in rural and underserved areas," said Fernando Wilson, acting director of the UNMC Center for Health Policy and lead author of the report.

Among the challenges the report cited:

The reality that nearly one-fifth of physicians in Nebraska are more than 60 years old, and thus likely to retire in the near future.

18 of 93 Nebraska counties have no pharmacist.

Demographics in many counties are becoming more diverse, but the current health workforce doesn't necessarily reflect the populations being served.

"In partnership with stakeholders from Scottsbluff to Omaha, we've made progress over the years. But the landscape of health care is rapidly changing, and we must remain diligent to sustain the progress we've made and close the gaps," Wilson said.

Wilson led a nine-person research team representing several professions from UNMC and received input from Thomas Rauner, director of the primary care office in the Office of Rural Health for the state of Nebraska.

It also looked at the sex, age, race and ethnicity of each health-care professional, as well as measured the number and rate of health care professionals per 100,000 people by county.

Other key findings of the report include:

The number of registered nurses increased by 61 percent in 10 years, from 17,335 to 27,922.

There are substantial gaps in the distribution of allied health professionals across Nebraska, particularly in north-central Nebraska, which has virtually no occupational therapists, speech language pathologists or medical nutrition therapists.

Nebraska currently has nearly 1,400 paramedics available — over 70 percent more than 10 years ago.

Based on the findings, the following recommendations were made:

Support existing pipeline programs and educational initiatives that incentivize health-care professionals to practice in rural communities.

Subsidize telecommunications and other infrastructure to support adoption of telehealth modes of delivering care to residents in rural areas.